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Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 October 2015

EofE - Germany, Tibia's and Bridges

EofE
London Hoxton's Underbelly
15/09/2015
Never, in its entire existence, has anybody returned to face the Grab Bag for a second time. Until now.

Last month (we’ve said it before but, our time management sucks) we saw EofE in Hoxton’s Underbelly ahead of the release of their incredible new self-titled album. It was there that EofE vs the Louder Now Grab Bag, round 2, happened.  

You’re bored. What do you do?
Luke: Err…I…
Dan: Is he allowed to say?
Luke:  I just play some games on my laptop.
Reece: What do you play on your laptop?
Luke: Football Manager usually!

Ever had an epic fail on stage?
Nicky: Every. Night.
Louder Now: Last time we saw EofE you were up on top of an amp. You must have fallen off of that at some point right?
Reece: I haven’t!
Nicky: Ahhhh now you’ve jinxed it!  
Reece: I haven’t had an epic fail, yet. In Rock City I did stand on my amp and I was wobbling a fair bit and everyone was laughing at me. I did think I was going to fall over I must admit.
Tom: I think your epic fail was when we were at the Great Escape and you stepped in that puddle. That was your birthday as well.  

Where is the worst place you have woken up?
Tom: Reece’s mums bed.
Reece: You can’t say my mum’s bed.
Tom: For comedic value.
Reece: But you’ve never been in my mum’s bed.
Tom: I have.  
Reece: You definitely have not.
Tom: I HAVE!
Nicky: We’ve all been there.

Who is your musical hero?
Dan: Slash. When I first got into guitar, I heard Sweet Child O’ Mine and was just blown away by his playing and that’s what made me really want to get into a band.

What is your favourite album?
Reece: It’s got to be the EofE one that you can get on iTunes.
Nicky: Nice plug, yeah!
Reece: It’s shit.
Dan: You mean the one that’s out on the 9th of October?
Reece: Yeah that one Dan.
Dan: It’s our debut album if I’m not very much mistaken.

What country would you most like to visit?
Luke: Germany.
Reece: Why?
Luke: I dunno, just always wanted to go to Germany really.
Reece: Boring.

Have you ever broken a bone?
Tom: No, I haven’t.
Dan: I have!
Reece: I have, I fell out of a tree.
Dan: I use to skateboard religiously.
Reece: Yeah, not very well obviously.  
Dan: I broke my tibia playing football. I didn’t know for months. It was a crack, but if you imagine bending plastic until you get that white line, just before it snaps, that’s what happened. So I carried on playing for like three months.
Nicky: God, you’re so hardcore.
Dan: I was kickboxing, snowboarding…
Reece: Ha! Running marathons and fought a bear once…
Dan: It actually started to bend out, where it kept healing and breaking again. I went to the doctors and they just said “oh it’s fine, it’s just a bit of swelling” and then had an actual scan.
Reece: This coming from the guy who has to cover his hair from the rain.
Dan: What are you saying?
Reece: You make yourself sound really hard!
Dan: Well I am. Or I was.

On a scale of 1 to 10 how weird are you? Explain.
Dan: Probably say a 7.
Reece: You’re weird because you can break bones and carry on.
Tom: That’s pretty weird.
Dan: I day dream quite a bit.
Tom: You do day dream all the time.
Dan: It sounds big headed, but I can start a conversation whilst thinking about something else, and then just carry on.
Reece: No, no, no. That’s just called being rude and ignoring people.
Nicky: And yes, you do have a big head.

Is there one thing that you want to become better at?
Reece: Definitely guitar for Dan.
Dan: Your suppose to be answering for yourself.
Nicky: This is a hard one, because we’re so good at everything.
Tom: What’s the question again?
Reece: Listening for Tom.
Dan: Yours has got to be drinking.
Nicky: I’m great at drinking.
Dan: Hmm.
Nicky: No, because I get drunk really fast then don’t have to spend as much money.  I have a great time! I’m a happy drunk, friendly.
Reece: You abused me at Download.
Nicky: Well we went out for my birthday, me and Luke. Reece was there.
Tom: I was there as well. You were smashed when I got there and you’d only had four pints.
Dan: I’d like to be better at getting up early in the morning, because I really struggle. I have to pick these guys up for practice at about 9:30 and it’s hard.
Louder Now: Driving whilst tired is probably not the best idea.
Dan: It’s better than driving hungover because that’s horrible.
Reece: You’ve never done that Daniel because you abide by the law.
Dan: Everyone drives hungover.
Reece: If everybody jumped off a bridge would you do it?
Dan: Probably.
Reece: If it was going into water…
Nicky: What kind of bridges do you go across?
Reece: Have you never gone over a bridge with water underneath it?
Nicky: Oh WITH water.

What is your favourite memory of being in this band?
Nicky: Mine would be Download Festival. That was a highlight for me.
Reece: Yeah Download, or the process of recording the album. We had a great time doing that. We bonded, we cooked…
Nicky: I was sick in the sink.
Reece: You were sick in the sink.
Tom: We got that picture right at the end with Johnny Rocker to say that we had finished the album.
Nicky: It was over five weeks but we spent weekends back at home.
Reece: It was pretty intense, we would be in the studio for 10 and then we would come back at 2 Am sometimes and then back in pretty much straight away.
Dan: Some of the songs came together in the studio. You figure out the small bits. It’s like you go in there with a jigsaw piece and then you put it all together, and that’s when you see what can really happen.
Tom: You can see what you’re missing that way as well because you have pieces that you think might work but when you hear it back, and you’re building up the layers it makes sense.



Tuesday, 16 June 2015

YOUNG GUNS GIVEAWAY

IT’S GIVEAWAY TIME!

Last week we asked Young Guns a handful of ridiculous questions from our Grab Bag!

But now we want to know what YOUR answers would be.

For your chance to win a SIGNED copy of the sensational new Young Guns album, Ones and Zeroes, click here, scroll to the bottom, and answer the question we put to Si Mitchell: "What was the most embarrassing thing to happen to you at school?"

The comment which makes us laugh the hardest wins the prize!

All entries must be made as comments on our recent interview with Young Guns (Young Guns – Heat, Sleep and Falling Over)
Comments made on any other post will not be considered.
All entries must be made by Sunday 28th June, 5PM BST.

We are happy to post the album worldwide but you must be willing to e-mail us your address (obviously!)

Leave your Twitter, Instagram or Facebook Usernames in your comment so we know who you are!

Good luck everyone! 

Wednesday, 10 June 2015

Young Guns launch out of this world album Ones and Zeros

Just in case you went into hibernation for the past few weeks and missed it, Young Guns came back!
All sorts have been going on. There was a show on a London bus, a headline UK tour, and a string of signings so that the several million Young Guns fans could get their hands on a signed copy of the new album, Ones and Zeros.
If all of that just doesn’t seem to be enough then we should mention that they also did an epic set at Kingston’s The Fighting Cocks. I know, I know, why there right? Well a) the place is incredible and a rock music landmark and b) Young Guns happened to play their first ever show there. Isn’t that neat?
Don’t panic, we got them to answer some Grab Bag Q’s (following some ever so slight coercion) and you can read their answers here.
The Buckinghamshire rockers burst onto the stage with what has easily become our favourite Young Guns track to date. I Want Out was first played on Radio One in August last year and is a beautifully articulate record that you can also lose your mind too. If you’re going to see Young Guns live make sure you have your jumping shoes on because when that chorus kicks in you’ll be thankful for it.
It’s also a strong indicator that Ones and Zeros was written with a live show in mind, but not the first. That honour goes to opening track Rising Up which was the next treat for the tiny Kingston venue.  

Throughout the album the chugging guitar lines, relentless drum tracks and countless lyrics that are literally screaming out for crowd participation show that this band are a live band and their short set in Kingston proves this to be right. The recordings are sensational but on stage, this band come alive and when you see it you understand why this band were so deeply missed when they left our shores for a while.
When the band launch into The Weight of the World (the first Young Guns song I ever heard) it was as if the whole crowd remembered that they were all old friends. As lead singer, Gustav Wood, points out this was the first track that they listened back to and realised that they could write songs. It was the song that started it all and it proved to be a timeless rock classic that will go down in history.
But we can’t think about the past for long as the band are now moving quickly into Speaking In Tongues and Daylight, both of which are shining examples of eloquent lyricism mixed with the raw rock core we’ve always seen from Young Guns but now with added dance quality. That’s something we wouldn’t have necessarily expected this time last year but it works. It really works.
Young Guns capped off this mini show with 2012 belter Bones as if to prove that they might have been away but everything we loved about them three years ago is as alive as ever. In fact, it’s got a whole lot stronger. Ones and Zeros is a stellar effort and the live shows are out of this world.
Young Guns are rock heroes already, they just have to do their time now.  
The only problem is with shows in June, at 2 in the afternoon, in a basement, is that they tend to get a bit on the warm side. But not to worry. Young Guns could have played all day long if they wanted. We would have happily evaporated for them.